74 AT: BONWIT TELLER NEW YORK; LANZ OF CALIFORNIA .;:::;:;:;:;:::....: :: 1;i4 " ''':.. <. ........:. .Þ> . .:.J = <; ':i::. '^ Ø"..$=:::::Æ W :(.. ;' '::;;:::::':::;:.:. "g: , ? :;:::;:;::: :<< .::::::;....:::;:: : :-": -* . . .: .." ".. ..:.. The first thing you notice is the fabric. When The Most Lanz of California checked out thIS fabric, Sinhue, they checked it into their line immediately. Why? It's smoother, softer, more colorful and lustrous, that's why Good-looking, you bet. Why else would Lanz travel 3000 miles to Crow!! Fabrics, 119 West 40th Street, New York 18, N.Y.? Crown Fabrics . ",,",-- "'"',- ...;;: <"V' J .... ... 7. ........ . . .. , -- 1..., C-..:. ......--- .". .. . ,ý>V ""'- . -.... rfi · ..' /r:::: f r r ).C' - "' - - - - - -.. ......-. -,, ------ ............. ..... S-'-- .......... .. -----=' -:- ......... \- . ;0: - ......,.-.r- } , , DENM. 'RK.. FINL ND'. NORVVÄ,V. S'WEDEN. Lands qf $u11Jit NJghts V,isi't ScandinaviaJ few places have as much to offer as these four sunnYr friendly countries of the North.. C.olorfuf fol k festivals, brill iont cultura I eyentsl' magn ificent scenery. Fairy tale villages in Den- '. mark, crystal . bl .lake ' in Finland, Norw y's L :: J,J1?ny awe-Insplnng fiords , ' an , . , ' t , he cnsp;----- , --t · hoes of Sweden's modern cIties.. Com... L..-- t .' ,.,.-- . -/ fortable, immaculate, modern hotels. I DeUcious foods. A friendlY , ' we , I ' c?me h -- , . , < t Jill ft t .all travelers -,flus special .' "" i\ ,,") ".. II Meet the Peop Ie progr m .. . I'll -- See (1 Travel Agent.. WrIte: -. -- I) ....... -- .: " _ SCANDINAVIAN TRAVEL .. - .!-._ .. OMMISSIO.N -. pt A .:. x26D.t NewYort l1i N Y .... r /' / of the brief and frustrating proceedings, nine witnesses were sentenced on the f ." I spot or perjury or muteness of ma - ice," and it is recorded that the only emotion they showed on hearing their sentences was relief. The defendants were acquitted, to the enormous en- hancement of Zu Calò's prestIge. The trial had amply demonstrated that he had powerful friends in the .LL1.rmy, In the admini"tration, and probably In Parliament itself. It was soon after his discomfiture of the Italian Army that Calogero Viz- zini-now considered the second Mafia personality of Sicily after Don Vito Cascio Ferro, and thus entitled to the honorific prefix "Don" -completed a social process that had been going on since 1860, when Garibaldi swept across the island, and that is part of the then1e of "The Leopard." The Mafia has at all times delighted in fishing in troubled waters and has therefore always been ready to support any attack on the centra] government, whether that of Italy or of its predecessors In keep- ing with thi" traditional policy, it came to the aId of Garibaldi in his overthrow of the Bourbon kingdom, and was prop- erly rewarded for its services. Don Calo- gero Sedàra, Lampedusa's sinister and powerfu] mayor, is shown as havIng made a fortune out of the war and as already overshadowIng the Prince of Salina, who has been left defenseless (as the Prince sees it) by his breeding, his gentlemanly scruples, and a somewhat atypical preference for the study of as- tronomy over the collection of rents. With melancholy resignation, SalIna foresees the eventual replacement of a class of otherworldly, enlightened feu- dal aristocrats by one of moneygrubbing realists. With allowances for the special angle of the Prince's view, this is rough- ly the historic process that was completed by Don Calogero VizzinI sixty years later. Don Calogero had no fault to find .:, with the feudal system as such; in fact, he was to become its greatest exponent and protector in modern Sicily. What he objected to was the fact that a somnolent and, as tht- Prince of Salina put it, a "defenseless" aristocracy should have any part in its benefits. Previously, it had become a function of the Mafia to keep a benevolent eye on the feudal estates and to suppress the periodic at- tempts made by the peasants to occupy uncultivated land. Now, under Don Calò's leadership, the Mafia proposed to shoulder the barons aside. In 1922, therefore, when the lease on the Mic- cichè estate, near Villalba, came under the hammer, Don Calò was a bidder- and, quite naturally, the only bidder,